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Batted ball

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In baseball and softball, a pitched ball that is contacted by the batter's bat

Casey McGehee on theMilwaukee Brewers puts a ball in play

In the sports ofbaseball andsoftball, abatted ball is apitch that has been contacted by the batter's bat. Batted balls are eitherfair orfoul, and can be characterized as a fly ball, pop-up, line drive, or ground ball. In baseball, a foul ball counts as astrike against the batter, unless there are already two strikes on the batter, with special rules applying tofoul tips and foulbunts. Fly balls are those hit in an arcing manner, with pop-ups being a subset of fly balls that do not travel far. Line drives are batted balls hit on a straight line trajectory, while ground balls are hit at a low trajectory, contact the ground shortly after being hit, and then either roll or bounce. Batted balls, especially line drives, can present a hazard to players, umpires, and spectators, as people have been seriously injured or killed after being struck by batted balls.

Fair or foul

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A view along a first base foul line, looking from the outfield wall back towards home plate

On the playing field, two straight lines (each known as afoul line) are drawn from the corner of home plate; one pastfirst base and one pastthird base. The foul lines extend all the way to the outer limit of theoutfield, typically a wall or fence, and perpendicularly up the wall or fence.[1]: 147  The entire area between foul lines, including the foul lines themselves, is considered fair territory;[1]: 147  anything not in fair territory is considered foul territory.[1]: 149 

In general, batted balls are judged by where they land (first contact the ground) or are first touched by a player. That is, a batted ball landing in fair territory or first touched by a player in fair territory is fair, while a batted ball landing in foul territory or first touched by a player in foul territory is foul. However, batted balls in the infield (not yet at or beyond first base or third base) are judged on either where they are first touched by a player orwhere they come to rest.[1]: 147  For example, if a batted ballin the infield first lands in foul territory but then rolls into fair territory and is touched there or comes to rest there, it is fair. Likewise, if a batted ballin the infield first lands in fair territory but then rolls into foul territory and is touched there or comes to rest there, it is foul.[1]: 146–147 

That a batted ball hit into the ground has to pass first base or third base in fair territory to be considered fair originated in response to "fair-foul" hitting of the 1860s and 1870s.[2] Batters would intentionally hit the ball into the ground in fair territory near home plate, at an angle that would send it into foul territory away from the fielders, allowing the batter to reach first base successfully.[2]Dickey Pearce, a well-known and respected player of the era, is credited with inventing the tactic.[2]

Effect

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Fielders can attempt to make anout by catching any ball hit in the air, fair or foul, as long as it is still in play.[1]: 39  Balls that leave the field of play, such as by going into spectator areas or thedugouts, are out of play. For balls on the ground, fielders can attempt to make an out on fair balls only.

A batted ball that clears the outfield fence in fair territory is ahome run.[1]: 22  Since 1931, whether such a batted ball is fair or foul is judged on its position when it leaves the field (that is, where it is as it passes over the outfield fence or wall).[3] Previously, the ball had to be "fair when last seen" to be ruled a home run.[4] Also since 1931, the ball must clear the fence or wall on the fly to be a home run; previously, the ball could bounce over and still be considered a home run—such a batted ball is now anautomatic double.[5][6]

A foul ball normally counts as astrike unless the batter already has had two strikes assessed against them, in which case thecount does not change. Treating foul balls as strikes was adopted by theNational League in 1901 and theAmerican League in 1903.[3] There are specific rules for foul tips and foul bunts, which are described below. In slow-pitch softball, a foul ballalways counts as a strike, even when the batter already has two strikes.[7]

Characterization

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Major League Baseball (MLB) uses four characterizations for all batted balls put into play:[8][9][10][11]

Anoutfielder about to catch a fly ball

Fly ball

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A fly ball is a batted ball hit in an arcing manner.[1]: 147  For statistical purposes,[a] MLB uses the term "fly ball" for such balls that go into the outfield, and a separate term (pop-up, below) for such balls that stay in the infield.[9]

Fielders attempt to catch fly balls on their descent, and an out is recorded if the ball is caught before it hits the ground.[12] Under early baseball rules, a fly ball caught on a bounce also resulted in an out; this was abolished for fair balls in 1864 and for foul balls in 1883.[6]

Pop-up

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A pop-up is a fly ball that does not travel far; rather than going into the outfield, it is hit to the infield.[8] Such a batted ball may, under specific circumstances, be deemed an "infield fly" by anumpire, which has special consideration as outlined below.[13]: 188 

Line drive

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Aninfielder about to field a ground ball

A line drive (colloquially, a "liner" or "rope") is a batted ball "hit in a nearly straight line usually not far above the ground."[14] Batters are usually most successful when they hit line drives, reaching base over 70% of the time, as compared to about 25% of the time on ground balls or fly balls.[15]

Ground ball

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A ground ball (colloquially, a "grounder") is a batted ball hit at a low enough trajectory that it contacts the ground a short distance after being hit and "rolls or bounces close to the ground."[1]: 149  The term isnot used for fly balls, pop-ups, or line drives that are uncaught and happen to contact the ground.[citation needed]

Statistics

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J. D. Martinez batting in 2012

MLB.com provides statistics for hitters, using the above four categories, as part of a "Batted Ball Profile". For example, during the 2022 season, for the balls thatdesignated hitterJ. D. Martinez of theBoston Red Sox put into play, 38.2% were ground balls, 30.8% were fly balls, 26.7% were line drives, and 4.3% were pop-ups (the four figures sum to 100%).[16]

FanGraphs also provides batted ball statistics, but uses the four categories slightly differently: all balls put into play are characterized into one ofthree categories: ground ball, fly ball (regardless of where hit), or line drive.[17] The percentage of fly balls that were hit in the infield is then provided as a separate figure.[17] FanGraphs's statistics for Martinez for the 2022 season indicate 38.2% ground balls, 39.7% fly balls, and 22.1% line drives[b] (the three figures sum to 100%).[18] Martinez also had a 5.8% "infield fly ball percentage",[18] meaning that 5.8% of the fly balls he hit were infield pop-ups.[17]

In 2010, FanGraphs noted that the "league average" for batted ball rates was 44% ground balls, 35% fly balls, and 21% line drives (the three figures sum to 100%) with 11% of fly balls being infield pop-ups.[17]

Special cases

[edit]

The following have special rules considerations.

Infield fly

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An umpire (in black shirt) indicating an infield fly—a verbal call is also made

A specific rule applies to infielders attempting to catch some fly balls: theinfield fly rule, which has specific context. If (and only if) there are less than two outs and there arebaserunners onfirst base andsecond base (or thebases are loaded) a fly ball "which can be caught by an infielder with ordinary effort" results in the batter being called out, regardless of if the ball is caught.[1]: 149  This rule is in place to prevent infielders from intentionally not catching the ball and being able to record multiple outs via aforce play.[19]

An infield fly is verbally declared by an umpire, whose decision "should be made immediately".[1]: 149  Umpires commonly also give a visual indication by pointing straight up in the air with their right arm.[20] If a batted ball declared to be an infield fly is left untouched and it comes to rest (or is first touched) in foul territory before passing first base or third base, it is treated the same as any other foul ball (that is, the batter isnot automatically out).[1]: 149–150  The infield fly rule was adopted in 1895.[3]

Foul tip

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By rule, afoul tip is "a batted ball that goes sharp and direct from the bat to thecatcher's hands and is legally caught."[1]: 149  A foul tip is considered to be the same as a regular strike, thus a foul tip (that is caught per the definition) with two strikes already against the batter results in astrikeout.[21] This provision has been part of baseball rules since 1895.[3]

Bunt

[edit]
A batter bunting—note the position of his hands on the bat

Abunt is a special type of batted ball. Bunts occur when pitched balls are "intentionally met with the bat" rather than being swung at.[1]: 145  A ball that is bunted by a batter may be fair or foul, and while generally it does not travel very far, it may be a ground ball (the desired outcome), pop-up, or (rarely) line drive.

Foul bunt

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Unlike other types of batted balls, for which a third strike is not assessed when a foul ball is hit with two strikes in the count, a third strikeis assessed to the batter when a two-strike bunt goes foul, resulting in a strikeout.[1]: 41  This rule originated as early as 1894 in response to batters intentionally bunting pitches foul in order to tire the pitcher, also impactingpace of play.[22]

Safety concerns

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PitcherAlex Cobb receives medical attention after being hit by a line drive on June 15, 2013.[23]

Batted balls, especially line drives, can be dangerous to players, umpires, and spectators. There are myriad examples; several are provided below. A batted ball hit sharply at the pitcher is known as a "comebacker".

In August 1982,Jim Rice of theBoston Red Sox left the dugout to carry a young boy that had been hit by a foul line drive into the team's clubhouse for medical treatment; the boy later underwent emergency surgery at a local hospital.[24] In July 2007,first base coachMike Coolbaugh was killed when a foul line drive hit him in the head during aminor-league game.[25] UmpireDale Scott had to leave a game in August 2012 after being struck by a foul tip while serving as home plate umpire,[26] and also had to leave a game in June 2015 when struck by a line drive while umpiring at second base.[27] In May 2019, a young fan at aHouston Astros game required hospitalization after being hit with a foul line drive.[28] In a June 2021 minor-league game, pitcherTyler Zombro was hit in the head by a 104 mph (167 km/h) line drive,fracturing his skull and causing him to have aseizure.[29]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^The term "pop-up", while defined onMLB.com, does not appear in MLB's Official Baseball Rules.
  2. ^Batted ball figures on FanGraphs and MLB.com may vary—categorizing batted balls is ultimately subjective.

References

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  1. ^abcdefghijklmno"Official Baseball Rules"(PDF).Major League Baseball. 2019. RetrievedOctober 8, 2022 – viaMLB.com.
  2. ^abcMcKenna, Brian."Dickey Pearce".SABR. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  3. ^abcd"Baseball Rule Changes".Baseball Almanac. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  4. ^"Babe Ruth Gained Four".The Kansas City Star. January 25, 1921. p. 12. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022 – via newspapers.com.
  5. ^O'Gara, Connor."Future Hall of Famer Al López Hits the Last 'Bounce' Home Run in Big League History".baseballhall.org. Archived fromthe original on October 16, 2021. RetrievedApril 16, 2020.
  6. ^abLanders, Chris (May 22, 2015)."10 bizarre baseball rules you won't believe actually existed".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  7. ^"Official Rules of Softball Slow Pitch"(PDF).World Baseball Softball Confederation. March 2022. p. 57. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  8. ^ab"Pop-up Rate (PO%)".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  9. ^ab"Fly-ball Rate (FB%)".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  10. ^"Line-drive Rate (LD%)".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  11. ^"Ground-ball Rate (GB%)".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  12. ^"What is a Flyout". Major League Baseball. Retrieved6 February 2020.
  13. ^"2023CPBLrules"(PDF) (in Chinese). CPBL.com. Retrieved2023-04-29.
  14. ^"Line drive Definition & Meaning".Merriam-Webster. RetrievedOctober 10, 2022.
  15. ^James, Bill."What I Have Learned About Fly Balls and Such".billjamesonline.com. Retrieved6 February 2020.
  16. ^"J.D. Martinez Statcast, Visuals & Advanced Metrics: Batted Ball Profile".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 10, 2022.
  17. ^abcdSlowinski, Piper (February 17, 2010)."GB%, LD%, FB%".FanGraphs. RetrievedOctober 10, 2022.
  18. ^ab"J. D. Martinez Games Logs - Batting - 2022".FanGraphs. RetrievedOctober 10, 2022.
  19. ^"In Defense of Baseball's Infield Fly Rule". The Atlantic. 12 October 2012. Retrieved6 February 2020.
  20. ^"Infield Fly Rule".umpirebible.com. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  21. ^"What is a Foul Tip?". Major League Baseball. Retrieved7 February 2020.
  22. ^Snyder, Matt (12 February 2018)."History of Two-Strike Bunt Rule a Reminder Pace of Play Issues are Over a Century Old".CBS Sports. Retrieved6 February 2020.
  23. ^"Tampa Bay Rays 5, Kansas City Royals 3".Retrosheet. June 15, 2013. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.Alex Cobb was struck on the right ear by a line drive; he was carried off the field on a stretcher and taken to a hospital suffering from a mild concussion
  24. ^Reiter, Ben (September 26, 2017)."Thirty-Five Years Ago, Jonathan Keane Was Hit by a Foul Ball. Then Jim Rice Saved his Life".Sports Illustrated. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  25. ^"Coolbaugh, 35, Dies After Being Struck by Ball". ESPN. 23 July 2007. Retrieved6 February 2020.
  26. ^"Injury: Dale Scott Hit in Chin, Leaves Nats-D'Backs Game".Close Call Sports & Umpire Ejection Fantasy League. August 11, 2012. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022.
  27. ^"OAK@TEX: Umpire hit by line drive, exits game in 4th". Major League Baseball. June 24, 2015. RetrievedOctober 9, 2022 – viaYouTube.
  28. ^Rieken, Kristie (30 May 2019)."Child Hit by Line Drive at Astros Game, Taken to Hospital". Associated Press. Retrieved6 February 2020.
  29. ^Simpson, Tonya (August 26, 2021)."Pitcher Tyler Zombro's remarkable recovery after being hit by a line drive".ESPN.com. RetrievedApril 21, 2022.

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